You may think that a standard home insurance policy will be sufficient to cover the building and contents of your rental property. In reality this is not the case, and therefore if you are renting your property out you need a landlords insurance: policy as standard home buildings and contents insurance will not cover you.
Landlord buildings and contents cover protects both the building and the contents belonging to the landlord within it. The building covers:
Having buildings cover in place can cover the cost of repairing or rebuilding your property if it’s damaged by fire, flood or vandalism.
You can include insurance to cover for contents of communal areas. This includes items such as the furniture, carpets and electrical items owned by the landlord for loss or damage caused by a range of specified perils such as fire, theft flood, storm etc.
Where you are letting the property on a furnished basis as a landlord you can arrange specialist cover in the case of events like fire, theft or flood.
However, landlord contents only covers items supplied and owned by the landlord. If the property is unfurnished and tenants provide their own contents, it is up to them to sort out tenants contents insurance.
A key difference between landlord buildings and contents insurance and regular buildings and contents insurance, is that it can be extended to include accidental and malicious damage by your tenants. No matter how hard you work as a landlord to vet your tenants, there may be a disagreement somewhere down the line and you can’t control how other people react. If they react by smashing a window or breaking a door for example, this could be covered as part of your landlord insurance.
It’s important to note that landlord insurance doesn’t cover your tenants’ contents. If your tenants want to insure the contents they bring with them, they need to buy their own contents insurance policy.